Options
A question for everyone regarding grading.

Do you think the major TPGs(PCGS, NGC, ANACS).. Take a large price jump into consideration before assigning a grade to a certain coin.
An example would be a 1926-D Buffalo nickel... In MS63 the coin is around 400-450... in MS64 it jumps to 1700-1900...
Do you think TPGs should take price scale into consideration when grading a coin?
An example would be a 1926-D Buffalo nickel... In MS63 the coin is around 400-450... in MS64 it jumps to 1700-1900...
Do you think TPGs should take price scale into consideration when grading a coin?
Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing about. -Benjamin Franklin-
0
Comments
Russ, NCNE
<< <i>well i'll give the obvious answer, but still true. They should grade what it is, without consideration to anything but an accurate grade.
>>
And also agree with Russ.
<< <i>I have no doubt that they do.
Russ, NCNE >>
Sure seems that way.
Positive BST: WhiteThunder (x2), Ajaan, onefasttalon, mirabela, Wizard1, cucamongacoin, mccardguy1
Negative BST: NONE!
Freak
Should they? -- No.
on the coin? So basically they are limiting their risk?
https://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistry/collectors-showcase/world-coins/one-coin-per-year-1600-2017/2422
<< <i>Hmmm.... a bit of wear on the high points. Oh looky, some field friction. Luster looks pretty good. Very original surfaces. Soooooo.....that makes it a...............would you pass the grey sheet, please?
<< <i>Do you think the major TPGs(PCGS, NGC, ANACS).. Take a large price jump into consideration before assigning a grade to a certain coin.
An example would be a 1926-D Buffalo nickel... In MS63 the coin is around 400-450... in MS64 it jumps to 1700-1900...
Do you think TPGs should take price scale into consideration when grading a coin? >>
Perhaps a little, but it's probably more true that the coin takes it into consideration; the price
jump exists largely because the coin is incrementally scarcer in the higher grade.
Oh, one is 1909 D Indian
and one is 1916S Indian, and there are a few cents and Sacagaweas the same way, but, both of those five dollar gold pieces that take a large jump in value at 62 make me wonder.
a big part of the problem is that the very graders are also Numismatists and know the value of coins. This puts them in a rather precarious way. Or is my thinking incorrect ?
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Few people are going to take the time or expense to send in an 1881-S Morgan for guarantee, but plenty of people would send in an 1884-S. If it is a $200 mistake, the graders may not even know or get an email or some small mention at review time, or similar. If it is a $20,000 mistake, I'd bet the graders know about it right away, and may even get grilled on it. Enough of those expensive mistakes by the same grader, and he/she might be in danger of losing their job. Guess what happens when that next $20k coin comes down the pipe? Human nature takes over and the grader(s) are extra careful before "making" another high value coin.
<< <i>
<< <i>well i'll give the obvious answer, but still true. They should grade what it is, without consideration to anything but an accurate grade.
>>
And also agree with Russ. >>
Yes.
NoEbayAuctionsForNow
Trinketts
Veteran
Posts: 661
Joined: Sep 2004
Tuesday February 28, 2006 11:26 AM (NEW!)
Do you think the major TPGs(PCGS, NGC, ANACS).. Take a large price jump into consideration before assigning a grade to a certain coin.
An example would be a 1926-D Buffalo nickel... In MS63 the coin is around 400-450... in MS64 it jumps to 1700-1900...
Do you think TPGs should take price scale into consideration when grading a coin?
AS PER THE ABOVE YOU SUM THINGS UP WELL INDIRECTLY
you already know what the colin grades you are noty sending in the coin for grading
YOU ARE SENDING ION THE COIN TO BE PRICED
the services do not grade coins they price your coins
if you wanted your coins graded you would leave them at hiome in airtights or your album as you already know what the coins grade
you just want your coins priced
which is not good or bad just the way it is
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>well i'll give the obvious answer, but still true. They should grade what it is, without consideration to anything but an accurate grade.
>>
And also agree with Russ. >>
Yes. >>
Al
<< <i>I thought I remembered HRH admitting to this. The quote was something like "We are in the business of grading coins, we don't want to be in the business of creating wealth". If I remember correctly, he admitted that a morgan with a slight price increase from, say 65-66 is much more likely to get the 66 than a date where the 66 jumps tenfold. Maybe I'm making this up, but it really seems like I read it somewhere. >>
Doesn't anyone else find this completely unacceptable? A coin should grade based on the coin itself, not what the price brings in a certain condition.
<< <i>
Do you think TPGs should take price scale into consideration when grading a coin? >>
Yes, if the grading guaranty really means more than diddly squat (it doesn't).
<< <i>
<< <i>
Do you think TPGs should take price scale into consideration when grading a coin? >>
Yes, if the grading guaranty really means more than diddly squat (it doesn't). >>
You have said that, probably, over 100 times.....can you get off that schtick and find something else to carp about since you don't seem to be very helpful in threads but rather just posting the same old BS over and over?
CU/HRH/Carol should do everyone a favor and ban you for badmouthing them....or just plain stupidity and ignorance.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
Personally, I would like all graders and tpg's to grade based on the coin itself- but I agree with the sentiment that the tpg's are pricing coins, and shifting their pricing strategies as they go.....